Boyd left the field in the second half in Auckland and will undergo scans on Monday to determine the extent of the injury.

He would be ruled out of Queensland's squad for at least Origin I on June 5 if it is confirmed he suffered a break.

The Warriors bounced back from last weekend's thrashing at the hands of Penrith to defeat the Knights.

Matthew Elliott's troops last week were humbled 62-6 by the Panthers, but a dominant second half against the Knights ensured they collected the two competition points.

They trailed 12-10 at the break and piled on three converted tries through Sam Rapira, Simon Mannering and Elijah Taylor in the second term, while preventing the Knights from even posting a single point.

James McManus registered a double for the visitors in the first half, both tries converted by Kurt Gidley.

Taylor says rebounding with a win was simply down to the Warriors adopting a renewed attitude.

"It's all pride," he said.

"We let down our season members, we let down all of our fans ... it was about being a man and taking pride in the jersey."

We let down our season members [against Panthers], we let down all of our fans ... it was about being a man and taking pride in the jersey.

Elijah Taylor

In a seesawing battle, the Warriors showed far more commitment than against the Panthers to bring up just their third win of the season.

The Warriors made a tactical shift in the second half, moving Mannering from the second row to right centre to shore up an area the Knights had been targeting.

They went back into the lead after a short ball from hooker Nathan Friend put prop Steve Rapira over.

The Eels were looking to exact revenge over the Titans following their controversial round-six clash where they were run down in the final minutes.

Instead, it was the Titans who had the last laugh again, running in seven tries to one as they recorded the biggest win of their seven-year existence.

Almost 10,000 people crammed into Mudgee Stadium, with most hoping for an Eels victory in their home game moved to the central west New South Wales town.

But it was not to be as the Titans made the most of their size advantage in the centres, with Jamal Idris grabbing a double and Brad Takairangi scoring one and setting up another as the visitors ran rampant.

Winger Kevin Gordon also crossed for two tries.

We ran hard, we played as we trained and we came up with some nice tries.

John Cartwright

Five-eighth Aidan Sezer had a field day, kicking seven from seven for a personal points haul of 14.

Titans coach John Cartwright told Grandstand his side did well to overcome some windy conditions at first before settling into a robust rhythm.

Cartwright lauded Idris' impact, saying he was working harder than ever after previous seasons blighted by injury.

"We turned a bit of the ball over in the first half and played into that gale of a breeze," Cartwright said.

"[The Eels] used it pretty well and didn't make many mistakes. We did well to be in front at half-time and to go on with it.

"We ran hard, we played as we trained and we came up with some nice tries.

"[Idris has been] injury free and had a full offseason. He had a bad injury that he carried the whole of last year ... he's the sort of guy that's got to work hard to keep the pounds off.

"But he does [work hard]. He's really enjoying his footy. He doesn't want to come off the field at the moment."

The Eels' task was made all the more difficult when they conceded a try shortly before half-time to trail 12-4 despite playing with the breeze at their backs in the opening 40 minutes.

A converted try to winger Gordon three minutes before the main break gave the Eels an eight-point buffer.

Gordon was the beneficiary of a terrific offload from centre Takairangi, who produced a wraparound pass with defenders swarming to allow Gordon a free passage to the corner.

The Titans had opened the scoring when Anthony Don took a Jamal Idris offload and ran 55 metres, beating Eels full-back Jarryd Hayne by dummying to half-back Albert Kelly before going himself to score.

Idris made sure the second half began like the first, scooting from dummy half and palming off Reni Maitua before reaching out for an 18-4 lead.

The Eels resolve looked cracked not long after, when a neat passing play on the left side of the field sent Takairangi over untouched.

When the whippet-like Kelly broke through and left Hayne clutching at thin air in the 60th minute, giving the Titans a 30-4 lead, the match was long gone for Ricky Stuart's men.

Gordon grabbed his double just four minutes later following a giant bust by William Zillman as Stuart watched on forlornly from the sideline.